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Jose Antonio Vargas’s article in the New York Times Magazine is a perfect, heart-rending story of the difficulties faced by illegal immigrants who strive to assimilate into the American dream — but it’s also a tale of the potential dangers of a fissured immigration policy and how forged documents have helped someone gain access to the White House.*

Vargas begins with a story all too familiar to me, because it’s what happened to my own father when he was 12, being sent away from a poor mountain village to seek out better economic fortunes:

One August morning nearly two decades ago, my mother woke me and put me in a cab. She handed me a jacket. “Baka malamig doon” were among the few words she said. (“It might be cold there.”) When I arrived at the Philippines’ Ninoy Aquino International Airport with her, my aunt and a family friend, I was introduced to a man I’d never seen. They told me he was my uncle. He held my hand as I boarded an airplane for the first time. It was 1993, and I was 12.

Eventually, Vargas arrives in the United States, assimilates, and realizes that through no fault of his own, he is actually an illegal immigrant. His family just wanted what every other family wants for their kids, except they had to go through extraordinary means to do it: Provide him with a better shot at having a good, prosperous life.

Peppered throughout Vargas’s piece are instances in which a person with less integrity, or even more vulnerability, could have posed a real threat — most notably when he uses falsified records to gain entry to, of all places, the White House:

I visited the White House, where I interviewed senior aides and covered a state dinner - and gave the Secret Service the Social Security number I obtained with false documents.

A state dinner. That means not just our own president, but other world leaders were at this event, and that the Secret Service ran his Social Security number and came up with no criminal record.

A spokesman from the Secret Service explained to me on the phone how the check doesn’t actually verify legal status but it does check his specific criminal record associated with the Social Security number he needed for work. But doesn’t that just mean that someone would have had to jump through a few extra hoops (replete with forged documents) to obtain his own Social Security number and have an entirely new identity? (This would also mean that it’s not just illegal immigrants that could do this, but either way, it’s a security hole.)

And while it’s clear that Vargas posed no threat (he also passed through a metal detector, was surrounded by security, and added underwent records checks), even the Salahis’ innocuous incursion into a state dinner bore some investigation. It may be worth understanding how a person who uses falsified documents to obtain a social security number gets cleared to access the White House.

Things like this seem less likely to happen with all the heightened security in Washington and America at large — but apparently they do. Restrictionists and open borders advocates alike should look to this and realize just how much our laws do and do not do to prevent people from doing certain things — Vargas laments that his poor documentation prevented him from going to Japan, Switzerland, or Mexico, but he sure as heck was able to cover the campaign trail and a state dinner.

Is that what our immigration policy is set up to do? Prevent our illegals from hitting the Swiss Alps?

The criminality of Vargas’s benign conduct — routinely using forged documents — is ameliorated only because Vargas happens to be an apparently benign person. It’s reminiscent of Frank Abagnale in Catch Me If You Can — if Abagnale were a terrorist, it would be an entirely different movie. 

*Salacious lede. Stick with me.

View all comments (10) |

l5j6| 6.23.11 @ 10:26AM

If we can't decide who and how many people are allowed into the USA, then we really aren't a country, not a sovereign one anyway.

We will soon become North Mexico, with a sizable Islamic/Sharia population.

Congrats open border types, liberals, neocons, immigrant lawyers, ethnic grievance hustlers, etc.

Bill Hussein O'Stalin| 6.23.11 @ 11:00AM

Vargas's father came from a poor mountain village?

He may have been better off there as opposed to a government financed ghetto full of drug dealers, corrupt politicians and rampant killings and crime.

That's my idea of a poor "village."

JohnD| 6.23.11 @ 11:22AM

welcome aboard, JP.

Chris| 6.23.11 @ 12:13PM

Yep, he's assimilated so well he's used forged documents. He also used a scholarship to go to college that would have gone to a citizen. Plus, he ruined a chance for his school choir to go to Japan because he had a fake passport. He's just a swell guy.

Sheila| 6.23.11 @ 12:46PM

Spot on, Chris. Your time is better spent elsewhere, TAS is filled with right-liberal shills for open immigration and the proposition nation fallacy.

J.P. Freire | 6.23.11 @ 1:22PM

Valid points all, and would that more attention did go to the displacement critiques. Thanks for bringing it up.

J.P. Freire | 6.23.11 @ 12:42PM

Thanks JohnD, though it'd be better to say, "Welcome back," since AmSpec has been home to my ramblings on and off for the last 6 years.

Bill, poor phrasing on my part -- I meant to say that my father came from a poor village. And I'll be honest, I think my dad likes Connecticut better.

MOS was 71331| 6.23.11 @ 1:28PM

This story is a total phony. Give me a break!

The only thing missing is Vargas' claim that he walked six miles each day to school and it was uphill in both directions.

C Bowen| 6.23.11 @ 3:58PM

It's no surprise he got cleared. Remember that male homosexual escort, Jeff "Gannon" Guckert, who was let into the Bush White House over 200 times, with 24 appearances when there was no scheduled briefing; he also failed to check-out 14 times.

Bang up job, lads.

More Blog Posts by J.P. Freire

http://spectator.org/blog/2011/06/23/does-illegal-immigrant-sob-sto

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